You don't have to practice yoga or follow an Ayurvedic diet to benefit from Buddhist ideas (but if you do, more power to you).
So whether or not you think about balancing your dosha, here are three
powerful elements of Buddhist philosophy, "The Noble Truths," and how
you can incorporate them into every day. They might just change your
life...
1. Dukkha: Life is painful and causes suffering.
Many people might say that Buddhism is pessimistic or negative. This is
a common result of learning that one of the Noble Truths is translated
as "Life is suffering." But there's more to this statement. It's not
just telling us, "Life is tough, so deal with it." So what is it telling
us?
We actually can create more suffering in our lives by
trying to avoid or suppress difficult emotions. Yes, our lives are
inevitably punctuated with various unpleasant feelings: loss, sadness,
fatigue, boredom, anxiety appear and reappear during our lives.
But attaching or clinging to particular expectations, material items,
and states of being is often a cause for acute frustration,
disappointment, and other forms of pain. So rather than fear our
suffering or seek an ultimate resolution to it (and become frustrated by
our lack of finding one), we can learn simply to recognize our
suffering.
How we can use this belief every day:
Try not to buy into the idea that you're broken. Expect that death,
aging, sickness, suffering, and loss are part of life. Practice
acceptance in the face of strife. Stop attaching to the idea that life
should be easy and pain free, both emotionally and physically. This is a misconception made popular by the fashion, beauty, and pharmaceutical industries.
Illness, heartbreak, loss, disappointment, and frustration are parts of
life that can be mitigated by practicing "non-attachment." Try to
embrace imperfection, to let go of this belief that life should be a
certain way. Open your heart to uncertainty.
2. Anitya: Life is in constant flux.
Anitya or
"impermanence" means that life as we know it is in constant flux. We
can never access the moment that just passed, nor can we ever replicate
it. As each day passes, our cells are different, our thoughts develop,
the temperature and air quality shifts. Everything around us is
different. Always.
When we are feeling especially uncomfortable, the concept of
impermanence can be, paradoxically, comforting. In other words: if
nothing is permanent, we know our pain will pass. But when we are
experiencing joy, the idea of impermanence can be incredibly
fear-inducing.
If we accept the idea of impermanence at
face-value, it can be incredibly liberating. In the West, about 100
years after the Buddha expressed this idea, Greek philosopher Heraclitus
mirrored the belief when he famously said, "You can never step in the same river twice." All we have is the present moment.
How we can use it in our everyday lives:
Celebrate the idea of change. Accept that everything is constantly
changing. It's kind of amazing, when you just think about it! And even
when the idea of impermanence might feel scary, it helps us appreciate
everything we are experiencing in the present: our relationships, body,
mood, health, the weather, our favorite shoes, our jobs, our youth, our
minds. So let's savor those moments we do enjoy and know that the ones
we don't enjoy will pass.
3. Anatma: The self is always changing.
When I ask clients what they want to get out of therapy, they commonly
answer, "I want to find myself." Our culture has led us to believe
there's a concrete, constant "self" tucked away somewhere in us. Is it
between our heart and liver? Or somewhere unknown in our brain? Who
knows!
Buddhism, however, assumes there is no fixed, stable "self." In line with Anitya
(impermanence), our cells, memories, thoughts, and personal narratives —
all of the "matter" that ultimately comprises our identities — change
over time.
Sure, we all have personalities (though they can change over time). We have names, and jobs, and other titles that we use to identify ourselves, to feel a sense of "self."
But the idea of a constant self is yet another story our culture has
told us. It is a story we can change, and thereby accept the idea that
we ourselves can change — at any time, in any place. As Thich Nhat Hanh
says, "Thanks to impermanence, anything is possible."
How we can use it in our everyday life:
Instead of focusing on "finding ourselves," we ought to focus on
creating the self we wish to be at every moment. It's possible for us to
be, and feel, different today than we were and felt yesterday. Being
depressed today doesn't mean we'll be depressed forever. We can forgive
others. We can forgive ourselves.
Once we let go of our attachment to the idea of the constant "self," we
can rest more comfortably with the constant change present in all of
life. In each new moment, we ourselves are new.
Source:-mind body green
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